GGoodrum
1 MW
Patriot said:The only questions I'll have when the boards are ready, is...
1. How much for/where to order all the parts?
2. And, how to wire it to the battery.
Other than that. I'll be good to go.
Laaa-Deee-Daaa-Daaa-Daaa... New battery, on the way soon.![]()
The parts for a 16-channel version will be about $60. I will provide a parts list text file in a format that can be submitted as a "Bill of Material" (BOM) to Mouser (http://www.mouser.com), which will save having to enter each part number, entering quantities, etc.
I'm working on an update to the illustrated instructions that I did for the previous version. In it will be the diagrams and instructions on how to connect the cells. The connections are numbered on the board, so it is pretty bullet-proof, but I highly recommend having a separate connector, or connectors, that go to the cell junctions, with a matching plug, or plugs, that go to the board. That way, you can do two things, test the connections, to make sure you got them right; and ensure that the cells get connected to the channels on the board in sequence.
I'm also a big fan of the .100-style RC connectors, and use a lot of them. I also like the AMP 4.2mm PE series, Molex-styled, connectors, mainly because you can have a single plug connections, but also because the pins in these are rated to 9A. The come in a variety of sizes, as well. What you need is a connector with one pin more than the number of cells, if you are going to use a single plug. For the previous 16-channel board, I used the 18-pin plug and connector, as they only come in even numbers.
I will also have diagrams illustrating how to break up a 24-cell setup into multiple boards that can still all be used together. An example of this would be to have three 8-cell sub-packs, that are connected in series for discharging, but in parallel for charging. In this case, the board would be split into three 8-cell sections, with the first one having the charger control portion, in addition to the first 8 channels. The "slave" boards are then connected to the other two 8-cell packs. The bus lines from each of the slave boards can then be daisychained to the "master" board. The sup-pack + and - lines are brought out separately and are connected in series for discharging, and in parallel, for charging. Each cell's shunt logic is separate, and self-contained, and so it matters not how the packs are configured as long as each channel can see the + and - connections for the cell it is monitoring, and as long as all the output bus lines are still all connected.
-- Gary